Mary Young Pickersgill

Woman Who Stitched the Star Spangled Banner

Mary Young Pickersgill stitched the Star-Spangled Banner, the large flag that flew over Fort McHenry during the naval portion of the Battle of Baltimore in the War of 1812. When he saw the flag still flying above the embattled fort the next morning, the sight inspired Francis Scott Key to write the poem that would become the national anthem of the United States of America.

Early Years Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania February 12, 1776, Mary Young was the youngest of six children born to William Young and Rebecca Flower Young. Mary’s father died when she was two years old. To support her family, Rebecca opened a flag shop in Philadelphia. Beginning in 1875, she made the Grand Union Flag, also called the Continental Colors, for the Continental Army. The Grand Union Flag preceded the Betsy Ross flag and is considered the first American flag. Young later moved her family to Baltimore, Maryland, where she taught Mary the craft of flag making from a very young age. Marriage and Family On October 2, 1795, at the age of 19, Mary Young married John Pickersgill, a merchant, and moved back to Philadelphia with her husband. Of Mary’s four children, only one survived childhood, a daughter named Caroline. Mary’s husband worked for the United States Government in the British Claims Office; he died in London on June 14, 1805, leaving Mary widowed at the age of 29. In 1807 Mary moved back to Baltimore with her daughter and her 67-year-old mother.

Flag Making Business The small family rented a house at 44 Queen Street in Baltimore where Pickersgill took in boarders and opened a flag-making business, selling “silk standards, cavalry and division colours of every description.” Her customers included the United States Army and Navy, and visiting merchant ships.

Great Garrison Flag In 1813, during the War of 1812, Major George Armistead commissioned Mary Young Pickersgill to make two flags for Fort McHenry, one of which was a 17 x 25–foot storm flag for use in inclement weather. For the second flag, Armistead requested “a flag so large that the British would have no difficulty seeing it from a distance.”

Image: Sewing the Great Garrison Flag

The large flag was initially called the Great Garrison Flag, which, at 30 feet high X 42 feet wide, was enormous. It was composed of fifteen horizontal red and white stripes and fifteen white stars in a blue field in the upper left. The number fifteen represents the thirteen original colonies, plus Vermont and Kentucky, which became states March 4, 1791 and June 1, 1792 respectively. The stars are arranged in five horizontal rows of stars, each containing three stars. Each of the fifteen stripes is 2 feet wide, and each of the stars measures about 2 feet in diameter.

As she began to assemble it, the huge flag overwhelmed the small rooms of Pickersgill’s house. This is an excerpt from an 1876 letter from Caroline Pickersgill Purdy to Georgiana Armistead Appleton of Baltimore, who was then in possession of the flag:

The flag being so very large, mother was obliged to obtain permission from the proprietors of Claggetts brewery which was in our neighborhood, to spread it out in their malt house; and I remember seeing my mother down on the floor, placing the stars: after the completion of the flag, she superintended the topping of it, having it fastened in the most secure manner to prevent its being torn away by (cannon) balls: the wisdom of her precaution was shown during the engagement: many shots piercing it, but it still remained firm to the staff. … The flag contained, I think, four hundred yards of bunting, and my mother worked many nights until 12 o’clock to complete it in the given time.

Pickersgill stitched the flags, sometimes with the help of her thirteen-year-old daughter Caroline; nieces Eliza Young (thirteen) and Margaret Young (fifteen); and a thirteen-year-old African American indentured servant, Grace Wisher. Records show that Pickersgill spent about seven weeks stitching the two flags, for which the government paid her $405.90, more than the annual income of her neighbors.

Battle of Baltimore The Great Garrison Flag was installed at Fort McHenry in August 1813. A year later, as Baltimore was preparing for an expected attack by the British, the flag Pickersgill made was hoisted above Fort McHenry as it was made ready to defend the city. Some one thousand soldiers under the command of Major Armistead awaited the British naval bombardment. They had submerged a line of American merchant ships at the entrance to Baltimore Harbor to impede the passage of British ships.

Image: Great Garrison Flag flying over Fort McHenry

On September 12, 1814, five thousand British soldiers in boats and a fleet of 19 ships attacked the city of Baltimore; the bombardment turned toward Fort McHenry on the evening of September 13. The British warships launched bombs and rockets on Fort McHenry in rapid succession. After an initial exchange of fire, the British fleet withdrew to just beyond the range of Fort McHenry’s cannons and continued to shell the American redoubts for the next 27 hours under heavy rain.

Although the British had launched 1,500 to 1,800 cannonballs on the fort, damage was light due to recent fortifications completed before the battle. When the British ships were unable to pass the fort and penetrate the harbor, the attack was ended.

Francis Scott Key During the Battle of Baltimore, American lawyer and amateur poet Francis Scott Key was aboard a British vessel in the Patapsco River, adjacent to Baltimore Harbor. Key had boarded the vessel to negotiate the release of Dr. William Beanes, an American being held by the British. As evidence of the good doctor’s work, Key produced letters from wounded British officers praising the care they had received from Dr. Beanes.

The British agreed to release Beanes, but Key and Beanes had to remain on the British vessel until the attack on Baltimore was over. On the morning of September 14, Key saw by the dawn’s early light that the Great Garrison Flag made by Mary Pickersgill was still waving above Fort McHenry, meaning that the fort was still in American hands. Inspired by this revelation, he began jotting down verses on the back of a letter he was carrying.

When Key reached Baltimore, he completed the four verses of his poem, naming it “Defense of Fort McHenry,” and copied them onto a sheet of paper. He probably made more than one copy. A local printer printed the new song as a broadside. Soon after, the Baltimore American newspaper published it, and by mid-October it had appeared in at least seventeen other papers in cities up and down the East Coast.

Image: Francis Scott Key Portrait by Joseph Wood, 1825

The Star-Spangled Banner Francis Scott Key’s poem was later put to music and retitled The Star-Spangled Banner, and a portion of it was adopted as the United States National Anthem. Most Americans knew the song by the end of the Civil War. Despite its widespread popularity, however, The Star-Spangled Banner did not become the National Anthem until 1931. The title comes from line seven of the first stanza:

O say can you see, by the dawn’s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight’s last gleaming, Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight O’er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming? And the rocket’s red glare, the bombs bursting in air, Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there, O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?

After the Battle of Baltimore, the Armistead family kept the Star-Spangled Banner; they occasionally gave away pieces of the flag as souvenirs, including one of the stars. The flag now housed at the Smithsonian Institution measures 30 feet by 34 feet.

By 1820, Pickersgill had earned enough money from her flag making business that she was able to buy the house she had been renting at 844 East Pratt Street in Baltimore. She resided there for the remainder of her life.

Social Reformer Mary Pickersgill became active in the social reform movement. From 1828 to 1851, she was president of the Impartial Female Humane Society, which helped disadvantaged women in Baltimore find housing and employment. In 1828, members of the society elected her as their president, a role in which she served continuously until 1851. This organization also helped impoverished families by issuing school vouchers for poor children – funds issued by the government that parents used to pay the tuition of their child to attend the public or private school of their choice

Under Pickersgill’s leadership, the Society built a home for aged women. She was still serving as president of the Society in 1851 when the Aged Women’s Home opened, and the Gothic Tudor building became a city landmark. An article in the Baltimore Sun gave this description of the home:

The Widows Home – this is the name of a really beautiful specimen of architecture, now rapidly approaching completion, and situated on West Lexington Street… [the first floor] contains fourteen single chambers, each containing a window, and with opening into a spacious hall… The second story likewise contains fourteen single chambers, as does the story above, all of which are nine feet wide and fifteen deep. … Each story is supplied with bath rooms, water closets, and every convenience which a well constructed residence affords; and in the third is an apartment designed for an infirmary… The basement contains a kitchen, dining room, sewing apartment, pantries and cellar, and beneath the entrance is a fine arrangement for a refrigerator on a large scale.

Mary Young Pickersgill died October 4, 1857 and was buried in the Loudon Park Cemetery in southwest Baltimore, where her daughter erected a monument for her and a civic-minded organization later erected a bronze plaque.

Star Spangled Banner Flag House The house where Pickersgill lived for 50 years, at the northwest corner of Albemarle and East Pratt Streets in downtown Baltimore, became known as the Star-Spangled Banner Flag House in 1927. The house was saved through the efforts of many preservation-minded citizens who were inspired by the Centennial Celebrations of 1914.

Nice information but the picture is wrong. The picture you show is depicting Betsy Ross sewing the first American flag with 13 stars in a circle pattern. As you described right next to the picture, the flag that Mary Young Pickersgill sewed for Fort McHenry had 15 in horizontal rows: “The number fifteen represents the thirteen original colonies, plus Vermont and Kentucky, which became states March 4, 1791 and June 1, 1792 respectively. The stars are arranged in five horizontal rows of stars, each containing three stars.” Easy mistake to make because so many images describe vice versa but Ross did her 13 in 1775 and Pickersgill did hers in 1814.

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If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom and deprecate agitation ... want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without thunder and lightning.
~ Frederick Douglass